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CROSSOVER: Family Trust Discovery Sanctions Opinion Offers Useful Crossover on Striking Pleadings, Rule 202 Limits, and Damages Causation

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Mary G. Mauldin and Carl Adams v. James C. Nix, III, as Co-Trustee and on Behalf of the Nix Family Trust, 05-24-01235-CV, June 30, 2026.

On appeal from 429th Judicial District Court, Collin County, Texas

Synopsis

The Dallas Court of Appeals held that even where liability for breach of fiduciary duty is established, damages still fail without legally sufficient proof that the complained-of breach caused a compensable loss. The court therefore reversed and rendered a take-nothing judgment on the fiduciary-duty damages award, remanded attorney’s fees tied to that recovery, and otherwise left intact the trial court’s sanctions regime and the balance of the judgment.

Relevance to Family Law

This is a trust case, but the crossover to family law is substantial. Texas divorce, post-divorce enforcement, fiduciary-duty, reimbursement, marital-waste, and SAPCR-related property disputes routinely involve sanction fights, pre-suit investigative maneuvering, and damages theories built on suspicion rather than causation proof. This opinion is useful to family-law litigators in three ways: it reinforces that death-penalty or pleadings-striking sanctions can survive repeated resistance to discovery orders; it underscores that Rule 202 is not a safe harbor for obstructive conduct once merits litigation is underway; and, critically, it gives defense counsel a strong appellate framework for attacking damages theories that do not actually connect the alleged misconduct to an economically supported loss.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The case arose from a dispute between siblings over the management of the Nix Family Trust. Their parents created the trust in 1994, and after the father’s death in 1996, the trust became irrevocable. Years later, as the mother’s health declined, the sister, Mary Mauldin, acted under a power of attorney for her mother, while the brother, James Nix, became concerned about the mother’s care, finances, and the trust’s assets.

James eventually discovered the trust and sought information from Mary. He first proceeded under Texas Rule of Civil Procedure 202, filing a verified petition to investigate potential claims and obtaining an agreed order allowing limited document requests and Mary’s deposition. Before that Rule 202 discovery was completed, James learned that additional real property transactions were occurring and filed a merits petition under the same cause number, asserting breach-of-fiduciary-duty claims and seeking injunctive relief.

What followed was extensive discovery warfare. The trial court entered multiple orders compelling Mary to respond, awarding fees, and addressing what it characterized as ongoing discovery abuse. Mary maintained that she had no obligation to provide discovery beyond what Rule 202 permitted, even after the trial court repeatedly ruled against her and even after mandamus relief was denied. Compounding the problem, she did not timely disclose that relevant financial records had been shredded, and the record reflected that this disclosure came only after repeated motions to compel and multiple hearings.

The trial court ultimately struck Mary’s pleadings as a sanction. The case then proceeded to a jury trial on damages and attorney’s fees only, with liability having been established by sanction and related rulings. The jury awarded $125,000 for breach of fiduciary duty, $18,000 for conversion of trust property, and more than $915,000 in trial-level attorney’s fees, while the trial court also awarded additional sanctions-related fees and costs. On appeal, the Fifth Court concluded that part of the damages case failed for lack of causation evidence.

Issues Decided

The court addressed, in substance, the following issues:

Rules Applied

Several appellate principles from this opinion matter well beyond the trust context:

From a procedural standpoint, the opinion also reflects that filing merits claims in the shadow of an earlier Rule 202 proceeding does not automatically create a jurisdictional defect requiring dismissal, particularly where the case proceeds in district court and the trial court manages the transition procedurally.

Application

The Fifth Court treated the appeal as involving two different stories: one about procedure and sanctions, and another about proof of damages. On the procedure side, the court was not persuaded by Mary’s insistence that the case remained confined to Rule 202. The record showed that once James filed live tort claims and the trial court began managing the case as merits litigation, Mary continued to refuse discovery on a theory the trial court had repeatedly rejected. That stance became increasingly untenable after multiple orders compelling discovery, fee awards, sanctions rulings, and the denial of mandamus relief. In other words, this was not a close call about a single disputed request; it was a pattern of defiance.

The destruction and delayed disclosure of financial records further aggravated the problem. The court’s description of the record suggests that the trial judge had a substantial basis for concluding lesser measures had not worked and that a harsher sanction was warranted. For appellate practitioners, the important point is that the sanction was sustained not merely because documents were destroyed, but because the entire course of conduct showed persistent discovery abuse and disregard of court authority.

On the damages side, however, the court drew a hard line. Even with liability established, the plaintiff still had to prove that the alleged breach caused an actual compensable loss. The court concluded that the evidentiary record did not sufficiently connect the fiduciary misconduct at issue to the $125,000 damages award returned by the jury. That failure was dispositive. Suspicion, opacity, and troubling conduct may support liability findings, equitable relief, or sanctions, but they do not substitute for causation evidence on money damages. Because the proof failed at that element, the correct remedy was not a remand for another try on damages, but reversal and rendition of a take-nothing judgment on the breach-of-fiduciary-duty damages claim.

The attorney’s-fee award then had to be revisited because at least part of it rested on the now-reversed recovery. The conversion recovery and sanctions-related rulings, however, remained undisturbed.

Holding

The court held that legally sufficient evidence of causation is indispensable to a damages recovery for breach of fiduciary duty. Because the record did not link the alleged fiduciary breach to the complained-of loss in a legally sufficient way, the court reversed the trial court’s damages award on that claim and rendered judgment that James take nothing on the breach-of-fiduciary-duty claim.

The court also held that the trial court’s attorney’s-fee award had to be remanded for reconsideration because the fee award was affected by the reversal of the fiduciary-duty damages recovery. That remand was limited; it did not disturb the entire judgment.

On the procedural and sanctions issues, the court otherwise affirmed. The trial court’s handling of the Rule 202-related procedural posture did not require dismissal for lack of jurisdiction, and the sanctions record was sufficient to sustain the trial court’s orders, including the striking of Mary’s pleadings and sanctions affecting counsel.

Practical Application

For family lawyers, this opinion should immediately be added to both your offensive and defensive toolkit. In divorce cases involving closely held businesses, separate-property reimbursement claims, trust interests, or allegations that one spouse dissipated assets, this case is a reminder that proving misconduct is not the same thing as proving recoverable damages. If your damages model depends on an assertion that a residence, company, trust asset, or marital account was mishandled, you need a clear evidentiary bridge from the conduct to the number. That usually means tracing, valuation evidence tied to the relevant date and transaction, and testimony showing how the challenged act produced the claimed loss rather than merely coexisting with it.

In custody and SAPCR litigation, the sanctions piece is equally important. Discovery abuse in relocation disputes, digital-evidence cases, financial-support disputes, and enforcement matters can justify severe sanctions when the record shows repeated violation of orders and strategic noncompliance. Lawyers who continue to litigate under a rejected procedural theory after multiple adverse rulings are building the appellate record against themselves.

This opinion also matters when a case begins with pre-suit investigation. Family-law litigators occasionally see Rule 202 used to investigate hidden assets, potential tort claims between spouses or family members, or anticipated trust and estate disputes overlapping with divorce. This case cautions that once merits claims are filed and the court is issuing merits-based discovery rulings, the responding party cannot keep invoking Rule 202 as a blanket limit to avoid ordinary discovery obligations.

Strategically, the best use of this case is twofold:

Checklists

Preserving a Fiduciary-Duty Damages Model

Building a Discovery-Sanctions Record

Defending Against Pleadings-Striking Sanctions

Handling Rule 202-to-Merits Transitions

Using the Case in Divorce Property Litigation

Citation

Mauldin v. Nix, No. 05-24-01235-CV, 2026 WL ___ (Tex. App.—Dallas June 30, 2026, mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

This ruling can be weaponized in Texas divorce or custody litigation from both sides of the docket. If you represent the party seeking sanctions, it supports the argument that persistent discovery obstruction, document destruction, and refusal to obey repeated court orders can justify striking pleadings, especially where lesser measures have failed. If you represent the responding party, the case is a warning that procedural objections—even sophisticated ones involving Rule 202, jurisdiction, or scope—must be preserved without crossing into defiance.

On the merits, the better crossover is damages causation. In divorce cases, litigants often overreach on claims involving dissipation, reimbursement, breach of informal fiduciary duties, misuse of powers of attorney, or mismanagement of trust-linked assets. This opinion gives you a clean appellate principle: even if the judge or jury believes the conduct was wrongful, there is no money recovery without evidence connecting that conduct to a measurable loss. In custody-adjacent financial disputes—support modifications, enforcement, educational-expense claims, and reimbursement fights—that same principle can be used to narrow or defeat inflated damages presentations that rely more on adverse inferences than on actual proof.

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